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As You Like It (Oxford Shakespeare) [Paperback]

William Shakespeare (Author), Alan Brissenden (Editor)
5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)


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As You Like It: The Oxford Shakespeare As You Like It (Oxford World's Classics) As You Like It: The Oxford Shakespeare As You Like It (Oxford World's Classics)
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Book Description

Oxford Shakespeare June 11, 1998
With its witty heroine Rosalind, who has the longest role of Shakespeare's female characters, As You Like It is Shakespeare's most light-hearted and most performed comedy. This edition includes numerous illustrations of productions and reassesses both its textual and performance history, showing how interpretations have changed since the first recorded production in 1740. It also examines Shakespeare's sources and elucidates the central themes of love, pastoral, and doubleness, and provides detailed annotations investigating the play's allusive and often bawdy language.


Editorial Reviews

Review

`'The annotation is generally superb...Especially outstanding is the section [in the Introduction] on the play in performance. There are 21 captivating illustrations. This edition shows the result of much original research and it is recommended unreservedly.'' Year's Work in English Studies

About the Author


Alan Brissenden is Reader in English, University of Adelaide, Australia.

Product Details

  • Paperback: 256 pages
  • Publisher: Oxford University Press, USA (June 11, 1998)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0192834193
  • ISBN-13: 978-0192834195
  • Product Dimensions: 7.6 x 5.1 x 0.6 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 9.1 ounces
  • Average Customer Review: 5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #1,010,908 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

More About the Author

William Shakespeare was born in Stratford-upon-Avon in April 1564, and his birth is traditionally celebrated on April 23. The facts of his life, known from surviving documents, are sparse. He was one of eight children born to John Shakespeare, a merchant of some standing in his community. William probably went to the King's New School in Stratford, but he had no university education. In November 1582, at the age of eighteen, he married Anne Hathaway, eight years his senior, who was pregnant with their first child, Susanna. She was born on May 26, 1583. Twins, a boy, Hamnet ( who would die at age eleven), and a girl, Judith, were born in 1585. By 1592 Shakespeare had gone to London working as an actor and already known as a playwright. A rival dramatist, Robert Greene, referred to him as "an upstart crow, beautified with our feathers." Shakespeare became a principal shareholder and playwright of the successful acting troupe, the Lord Chamberlain's Men (later under James I, called the King's Men). In 1599 the Lord Chamberlain's Men built and occupied the Globe Theater in Southwark near the Thames River. Here many of Shakespeare's plays were performed by the most famous actors of his time, including Richard Burbage, Will Kempe, and Robert Armin. In addition to his 37 plays, Shakespeare had a hand in others, including Sir Thomas More and The Two Noble Kinsmen, and he wrote poems, including Venus and Adonis and The Rape of Lucrece. His 154 sonnets were published, probably without his authorization, in 1609. In 1611 or 1612 he gave up his lodgings in London and devoted more and more time to retirement in Stratford, though he continued writing such plays as The Tempest and Henry VII until about 1613. He died on April 23 1616, and was buried in Holy Trinity Church, Stratford. No collected edition of his plays was published during his life-time, but in 1623 two members of his acting company, John Heminges and Henry Condell, put together the great collection now called the First Folio.

 

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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars "Sweet are the uses of adversity.", August 22, 2005
This review is from: As You Like It (Oxford Shakespeare) (Paperback)
AS YOU LIKE IT presents itself as a comedy but more substantially a spiritual meditation of one's conversion to goodness. While the play retains conventionalities that resonate in his other comedies, Shakespeare had obviously nudged the play to a direction that is redolent of a religious overtone. The main plot concerns Rosalind, a woman who disguises as a man but pretends to be the woman she actually is so she can woo the man by teaching him to court her. A streak of melancholy runs through the play from the beginning when Orlando is bitter at his brother Oliver who has deprived him of a genteel education and retains him at home. The melodrama of the brothers presages a possible tragedy as Oliver proposes to burn the lodging where Orlando customarily lives and with Orlando in it.

Diversion away from the city and court somewhat mitigates the tension. Far away in the fairyland-like Forest of Arden (allusive to Eden) resides a banished duke whose crown and lands his brother Frederick has usurped. Duke Senior, in his landmark opening speech in Act 2, which introduces the allegorical Arden, duly expounds the pastoral philosophy. He articulates the monologue so well that the phrases become proverbial and the speech a sermon. Most of the actions then occur in Arden and in which almost all of the characters converge. Arden in a way represents a religious ideal and a converging ground for everyone to renew their identity and spirituality.

As Orlando flees from his villainous brother, Rosalind's venomous uncle Duke Frederick banishes her from the court to be with her father. Rosalind enters Arden disguised as a young man Ganymede and teaches Orlando about wooing. Whereas the woodlands of A MIDSUMMER NIGHT'S DREAM are genuinely magical and populated by fairies, the Forest of Arden is like a fictitious realm that represents an ideal in which social values, love, marriage, and identity are renewed and re-examined.

Shakespeare contrived to make a tale of redemption or some sort of a moral lesson out of AS YOU LIKE IT, preaching the ideal pastoral philosophy through the de-emphasizing of the plot. The story does not seem to matter as much as the underlying moral theme Shakespeare determined to convey. While Rosalind plays a leading part of the play and peremptorily takes charge of the play's situation (which facetiously involves entangled love among multiple parties), she extorts the necessary promises from all concerned and ties the right knots. Her preponderating overshadows Orlando despite the initial stress on his manliness and valor.

AS YOU LIKE IT is predominantly in prose: the opening scene that delineates Orlando's pent-up agony proceeds in verses so does the scene in which the usurping Duke dismisses Orlando and that in which he banishes Rosalind. The scenes involving the banished Duke, who delivers a tirade on pastoral philosophy in Arden, are all written in prose. It is not a coincidence, but rather a meticulous choice that the sober and solemn parts of the play are penned in prose.

Variation of theme that manifests in different plays again surface in AS YOU LIKE IT. Rosalind, whose disguise is already a Shakespearean convention, in teaching Orlando how to woo, speaks about the caprice of human heart, the failure of lovers' to keep in pace with emotions, and the conflict between impulse, feeling, and truth.

AS YOU LIKE IT could be easily one of the most canonical plays in the repertory owing to the fact that readers can lay claim to the text on their own behalf. The endless possibilities to interpret the play also ironically invite misleading account from focusing on only selected features. The famous line "sweet are the uses of adversity" cunningly sums up how in most comedies a near tragic crisis at which disaster or happiness may ensue could be overcome by such overriding force of goodwill.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars As he liked it, June 6, 2010
This review is from: As You Like It (Oxford Shakespeare) (Paperback)
Out of all the great Shakespeare's plays, "As You Like It" is undoubtedly... the fluffiest. This is cotton candy. Fortunately, cotton candy isn't too bad as long as you don't eat too much of it. And while the ending is excessively tidy, "As You Like It" is a charming little play with the full array of Shakespearean tropes -- transvestitism, love triangles, and mass confusion.

Backstory: The cruel Duke has deposed his far nicer brother, and the ex-Duke has run off into the Forest of Arden. At the same time, a young man named Orlando has been cast out by his cruel brother Oliver.

Then the Duke decides to exile his niece Rosalind, despite the pleas of his daughter Celia. So Rosalind (disguised as a boy), Celia and the jester Touchstone run away into the Forest of Arden the following night, and soon encounter the exiled Duke and his followers. So does Orlando and his faithful servant Adam.

Because of a previous meeting, Rosalind and Orlando are already in love. But not only does he not recognize her, but because she's disguised as a boy she's attracted the amorous intentions of a local shepherdess. And to make matters even more complex, Touchstone is in a love triangle of his own, and Oliver has stumbled into Arden as well. Is everything going to end well?

The biggest problem with "As You Like It" is the fact that the ending is just a little too tidy -- while it's plausible that the romantic tangles would be smoothed out, there's an conveniently-timed twist that stretches believability to the point of snapping. Fortunately, the rest of it is a pleasantly fluffy little story filled with Shakespeare's sparkliest, sunniest storytelling.

Shakespeare's plot floats along in a heady cloud of sunlit forests, poems pinned to trees and languid outlaws who hang around singing all day. His lines are filled with clever, sometimes bawdy jokes ("praised be the gods for thy foulness! sluttishness may come hereafter") and some nicely evocative imagery ("Between the pale complexion of true love/And the red glow of scorn and proud disdain").

The funniest parts involve the love quadrangle between Rosalind, Phebe, Orlando and Silvius, as well as Orlando's wretched poetry and Touchstone's mockery of them ("Winter garments must be lined,/So must slender Rosalind").

And it has a likable cast of characters, most of whom are amiable and likable (although I'm still not sure why Orlando and the ex-Duke don't recognize Rosalind!). Celia and Rosalind are fun and sprightly heroines, Orlando is an endearing underdog (if a rotten poet), and there's also the sharp-tongued Touchstone, dour Jacques, and the rather beyotchy Phebe.

"As You Like It" is a puffy little wisp of a play, compared to Shakespeare's other works -- but it's still a nice little romantic diversion. Think of it as an Elizabethan romantic comedy.
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0 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars 'Nature' , which is universally venerable, December 16, 2005
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This review is from: As You Like It (Oxford Shakespeare) (Paperback)
One of William Shakespeare's comedy 'As You like it' has a lesson that a good will must be a praiseworthy thing and villainous intention is something always discouraged by the justice. It is something that we were able to learn from the fables and parents during the childhood. Duke Senior who living in banishment done by Duke Fredrick who is rascal in this comedy, and Duke Senior's daughter Rosalind disguied as a Ganymede searching for her father shows intriguing scene for the readers. True problem is that, Duke Fredrick's daughter Celia escaped with her cousin Rosalind because they are truly the confidant for each other. Therefore, Duke Fredrick displayed sense of resentment toward what his daughter and niece has done, and decide to go to wood to penalize his brother the Duke Senior. However, his attitude experiencing sudden transformation and repentant about his previous behaviors. Duke Fredrick's rapid psychological revolution should be awkward factor in this play. But we as a reader should interpret this as charater's assimilation to the nature. It means that the 'Nature' is place where has an innocent spirit and the castle, where deteriorated by human's negative will. I recommend this masterpiece, becuase there is a lesson implied in this comedy inculcate us that our human's mind has been deteriorated because of dwell in a city and surrounded by various artifact circumstances, it contradict to the 'Nature'
which has a universally respectable tranquility.
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Inside This Book (learn more)
First Sentence:
IN the eighteenth century Samuel Johnson declared, 'Of this play the fable is wild and pleasing'. Read the first page
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
hey ding, seventh cause, speech headings, earliest instance, golden world, married tomorrow
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
Duke Senior, New York, Sir Oliver Martext, Sir Rowland, Drury Lane, Enter Rosalind, Old Vic, Robin Hood, Enter Orlando, Jaques de Boys, Twelfth Night, Helen Faucit, Geneva Bible, Samuel Johnson, Edith Evans, National Theatre, Peggy Ashcroft, Sir John of Bordeaux, Vanessa Redgrave, Adam Spencer, Compare Hamlet, Harcourt Williams, Lodge's Rosalynde, Robert Greene, Shakespeare Survey
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